Namespaces

Variants

Views

Actions

Geometric measure theory

An area of analysis concerned with solving geometric problems via measure-theoretic techniques. The canonical motivating physical problem is probably that investigated experimentally by J. Plateau in the nineteenth century [a4]: Given a boundary wire, how does one find the (minimal) soap film which spans it? Slightly more mathematically: Given a boundary curve, find the surface of minimal area spanning it. (Cf. also Plateau problem.) The many different approaches to solving this problem have found utility in most areas of modern mathematics and geometric measure theory is no exception: techniques and ideas from geometric measure theory have been found useful in the study of partial differential equations, the calculus of variations, harmonic analysis, and fractals.

Successes in the field include: classifying the structure of singularities in soap films (see [a18], together with the fine descriptive article [a3]); showing that the standard "double bubble" is the optimal shape for enclosing two prescribed volumes in space [a13], and developing powerful computer software for modelling the evolution of surfaces under the action of physical forces [a7].

The main reference text for the subject is [a12]. It is very densely written and [a15] serves as a useful guide through it; [a11] provides a comprehensive overview of the subject and contains a summary of its main results. For suitable introductions, see also [a17], which contains an introduction to the theory of varifolds and Allard's regularity theorem, and [a14], which includes information about tangent measures and their uses. For a slightly different slant, [a9] discusses applications of some of the ideas of geometric measure theory in the theory of Sobolev spaces and functions of bounded variation.

Many variational problems (cf. also Variational calculus) are solved by enlarging the allowed class of solutions, showing that in this enlarged class a solution exists, and then showing that the solution possesses more regularity than an arbitrary element of the enlarged class. Much of the work in geometric measure theory has been directed towards placing this informal description on a formal footing appropriate for the study of surfaces.

Contents

Rectifiability for sets.

The key concept underlying the whole theory is that of rectifiability, a measure-theoretic notion of smoothness (cf. also Rectifiable curve). A set in Euclidean -space is (countably) -rectifiable if there is a sequence of mappings, , such that

A basic decomposition theorem states that any set of finite -dimensional Hausdorff measure may be written as the union of an -rectifiable set and a purely -unrectifiable set, with the intersection necessarily having -measure zero.

In practice, the definition of rectifiability is commonly used with Lipschitz mappings replacing mappings: it may be shown that this does not change anything, see [a14], Thm. 15.21.

A standard example of a -rectifiable set in the plane is a countable union of circles whose centres are dense in the unit square and with radii having a finite sum; the closure of the resulting set contains the unit square, and yet, as indicated below, the set itself still has "tangents" at -almost every point. An example of a purely -unrectifiable set is given by taking the cross-product of the -Cantor set with itself. (The -Cantor set is formed by removing intervals of diameter , rather than as for the plain Cantor set, at each stage of its construction.)

Approximate tangents.

The main importance of the class of rectifiable sets is that it possesses many of the nice properties of the smooth surfaces which one is seeking to generalize. For example, although, in general, classical tangents may not exist (consider the circle example above), an -rectifiable set will possess a unique approximate tangent at -almost every point: An -dimensional linear subspace of is an approximate -tangent plane for at if

and for all ,

Conversely, if has finite -measure and has an approximate -tangent plane for -almost every , then is -rectifiable.

Besicovitch–Federer projection theorem.

Often, one is faced with the task of showing that some set, which is a solution to the problem under investigation, is in fact rectifiable, and hence possesses some smoothness. A major concern in geometric measure theory is finding criteria which guarantee rectifiability. One of the most striking results in this direction is the Besicovitch–Federer projection theorem, which illustrates the stark difference between rectifiable and unrectifiable sets. A basic version of it states that if is a purely -unrectifiable set of finite -dimensional Hausdorff measure, then for almost every orthogonal projection of onto an -dimensional linear subspace, . (It is not particularly difficult to show that in contrast, -rectifiable sets have projections of positive measure for almost every projection.) This deep result was first proved for -unrectifiable sets in the plane by A.S. Besicovitch, and later extended to higher dimensions by H. Federer. Recently (1998), B. White [a19] has shown how the higher-dimensional version of this theorem follows via an inductive argument from the planar version.

Rectifiability for measures.

It is also possible (and useful) to define a notion of rectifiability for Radon (outer) measures: A Radon measure is said to be -rectifiable if it is absolutely continuous (cf. also Absolute continuity) with respect to -dimensional Hausdorff measure and there is an -rectifiable set for which . The complementary notion of a measure being purely -unrectifiable is defined by requiring that is singular with respect to all -rectifiable measures (cf. also Mutually-singular measures). Thus, in particular, a set is -rectifiable if and only if (the restriction of to ) is -rectifiable; this allows one to study rectifiable sets through -rectifiable measures.

It is common in analysis to construct measures as solutions to equations, and one would like to be able to deduce something about the structure of these measures (for example, that they are rectifiable). Often, the only a priori information available is some limited metric information about the measure, perhaps how the mass of small balls grows with radius. Probably the strongest known result in this direction is Preiss' density theorem [a16] (see also [a14] for a lucid sketch of the proof). This states that if is a Radon measure on for which exists and is positive and finite for -almost every , then is -rectifiable.

Preiss' main tool in proving this result was the notion of tangent measures. A non-zero Radon measure is a tangent measure of at if there are sequences and such that for all continuous real-valued functions with compact support,

Thus, an -rectifiable measure will, for almost-every point, have tangent measures which are multiples of -dimensional Hausdorff measure restricted to the approximate tangent plane at that point; for unrectifiable measures, the set of tangent measures will usually be much richer. The utility of the notion lies in the fact that tangent measures often possess more regularity than the original measure, thus allowing a wider range of analytical techniques to be used upon them.

Currents.

A natural approach to solving a minimal surface problem would be to take a sequence of approximating sets whose areas are decreasing and finally extract a convergent subsequence with the hope that the limit would possess the required properties. Unfortunately, the usual notions of convergence for sets in Euclidean spaces are not suited to this. The theory of currents, introduced by G. de Rham and extensively developed by Federer and W.H. Fleming in [a10] (see [a11] for a comprehensive outline of the theory and [a12] for details), was developed as a way around this obstacle for oriented surfaces. In essence, currents are generalized surfaces, obtained by viewing an -dimensional (oriented) surface as defining a continuous linear functional on the space of differential forms with compact support of degree (cf. also Current). Using the duality with differential forms, it is then possible to define many natural operations on currents. For example, the boundary of an -current can be defined to be the -current, , which is given via the exterior derivative for differential forms (cf. also Exterior algebra) by setting

Of particular importance is the class of -rectifiable currents: this class consists of the currents that can be written as

where is an -rectifiable set with , is a positive integer-valued function with and can be written as with forming an orthonormal basis for the approximate tangent space of at for -almost every . (That is, is a unit simple -vector whose associated -dimensional vector space is the approximate tangent space of at for -almost every .) The mass of a current given in this way is defined by . If the boundary of an -rectifiable current is itself an -rectifiable current, then the -current is said to be an integral current. These are the class of currents suitable for investigating Plateau's problem. The celebrated Federer–Fleming closure theorem says that on a not too wild compact domain (it should be a Lipschitz retract of some open neighbourhood of itself), those integral currents on the domain which all have the same boundary , an -current with finite mass, and for which is bounded above by some constant , form a compact set. (The topology is that generated by the integral flat distance, defined for -integral currents , by

where the infimum is over and such that is an -rectifiable current on and is an -rectifiable current on .) In particular, if the constant is chosen large enough so that this set is non-empty, then one can deduce the existence of a mass-minimizing current with the given boundary .

Varifolds.

The theory of currents is ideally suited for investigating oriented surfaces, but for unoriented surfaces problems arise. The theory of varifolds was initiated by F.J. Almgren and extensively developed by W.K. Allard [a1] (see also [a2] for a nice survey) as an alternative notion of surface which did not require an orientation. An -varifold on an open subset of is a Radon measure on . (Here, denotes the Grassmann manifold of -dimensional linear subspaces of .) The space of -varifolds is equipped with the weak topology given by saying that if and only if for all compactly supported, continuous real-valued functions on . Given an -varifold , one associates a Radon measure on , , by setting for . As a partial converse, to an -rectifiable measure one can associate an -rectifiable varifold by defining for ,

where is the approximate tangent plane at . The first variation of an -varifold is a mapping from the space of smooth compactly supported vector fields on to , defined by

If , then the varifold is said to be stationary. The idea is that the variation measures the rate of change in the "size" of the varifold if it is perturbed slightly. A key result in the theory of varifolds is Allard's regularity theorem, which states that stationary varifolds which satisfy a growth condition (detailed below) are supported on a smooth manifold. More precisely: For all there are constants , such that whenever , , and is an -dimensional stationary varifold on the open ball with

1) ;

2) existing and equal to at least one for -almost every ; and

3) , then is a continuously differentiable embedded -submanifold of , and for points in this submanifold. (The distance between the tangent spaces is given by the distance between their corresponding orthogonal projections.) This is a theorem which gives much more than just rectifiability; it gives information about the degree of smoothness as well. See [a17] for some variants and a proof of this result.

Generalization.

Given the success of the theory in Euclidean spaces, it is natural to ask whether a similar theory holds in more general spaces [a8]. There are many difficulties to be overcome, but [a5], [a6] suggest that it may be possible.